Abdulwasiu

11.3K posts

Abdulwasiu

Abdulwasiu

@jwastecx

Civil Engineer| Structural | Hydraulics|Project Management

Nigeria Katılım Eylül 2014
409 Takip Edilen357 Takipçiler
EDO-ÓOKARO VBE EDO
EDO-ÓOKARO VBE EDO@osamede120·
@RealAchufuiwe01 @YOLICOM6 It's no joke, just check akotogbo, or ado akure on tiktok or x, it just that many have been yorubanized, many belongs to the royal family so they don't get oppressed but they are there
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Arábìnrin Sola
Arábìnrin Sola@YOLICOM6·
In the south east, there’s Igala, orring, Benin, Ijaw, Idoma, Ika, Ukwuani, etc. majority of Anambra/Enugu is Igala and Benin , Imo is majorly Ijaw, Abia is Efik/ibibio/Benin, Ibos are a minority in south east
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@nic_ori07 @jprizzolawande @Adaigboglobal Lagos contribute more man than it takes from the federation account. It's the other way around. Money generated in Lagos is used to subsidise other states If you are looking at where the major oil producing state money is going, look no further than the southeast for a start!
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Nic o
Nic o@nic_ori07·
@jprizzolawande @Adaigboglobal How did Lagos help her ??? Money was taken from the south south and south east to build Lagos to a commercial city which should accommodate all. Lagos did not help her. Nigeria helped Lagos with money from other regions
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Lilian Ogechi
Lilian Ogechi@Adaigboglobal·
If there is any uproar we need to have in Nigeria, it should be about the marginalization of those living outside their states of origin. When Akpabio returns from South Africa, he should come and remove the cloak in the eyes of Nigerians. Our lives matter too This is my personal one-month tax contribution to the Lagos State Government for March 2026. I cannot pay this money to the Akwa lbom State Government; I am mandated to pay it to Lagos State. Yet in the same Lagos where I pay these taxes, someone from lbadan, Ogun, Ondo, or Ekiti who pays zero taxes, will come out to tell me it is wrong if I am sent for government training with tax payers money: If I were paying taxes in a sane society, I should even be entitled to salaries from the government if I lose my job. But here, we pay for nothing, and some people will still say I cannot benefit from government programs because my surname is not Adekoya, Ajayi, or Olusola. If Nigeria is not ready for true federalism, let us know, so that everyone will pay taxes to their own state and demand benefits from their representatives there. We cannot only read the constitution when it comes to taxing us, but suddenly be told to be "sensitive" when it comes to enjoying benefits. So charging me huge taxes isn't insensitive, but asking for benefits is? If you live anywhere in Nigeria and believe a citizen does not deserve government benefits simply because his parents aren't from that city, you are worse than those displaying xenophobia in South Africa. The finger you point at South Africa is pointing back at you. How many of you so-called Yoruba people are paying taxes in Lagos State? How many? I wake up every day in rain and sunshine to go to work, taxing myself and ensuring that the Lagos State Government is funded. Yet you, contributing nothing, think you are more deserving simply because you bear a Yoruba surname. Iku pa e. Bring your tax certificate or pank alert here, let's see what you actually contribute to the state. @Roberta Edu
Lilian Ogechi tweet mediaLilian Ogechi tweet media
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@_agneeess Chainage 2+622 It means from the start of the road currently under construction, the culvert is located on a chianage 2km 622m
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Black Nation♥️
Black Nation♥️@_agneeess·
Engineers and Surveyors here, please what does this number mean???🤔
Black Nation♥️ tweet media
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Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@Zainab_Folasade The funny thing is that his Yoruba predecessor from Ofa didn't employ anyone from his own village.
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Zainab_Afolashade ☘️
Zainab_Afolashade ☘️@Zainab_Folasade·
I remember when they brought a Kogi man to become VC of F. U. T minna, this man gave so many igbira admissions that people were calling it an Igbira Uni. You will go online to search fut minna and it'll be showing "federal university of technology minna, Kogi state. 😂 One Nigeria una. You bring a non-indigene to rule you and they'll show you how to be conservative. Nobody stupid like liberal people.
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@Zainab_Folasade Did you finish from FUT Minna? Are you talking about Audu? The guy took the job meant for the host community like security, gate man, etc, and gave it to his Okene people.
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🇨🇦 Ademola🇨🇭
🇨🇦 Ademola🇨🇭@Alkaneseries·
Hello, history rewriter, GET DOWN! Dangote refinery was majorly built by Nigerians. Why do people like you have such a penchant for lying and downplaying black people’s efforts and achievements? In this interview, Dangote mentioned “We realized that we had to build our own port, after building the port, we realize that nobody could supply us with cranes 🏗️ ,equipments, we had to do something that people didn’t realize, we now made ourselves as the EPC contractors, which is Engineering, Procurement and Construction” In another interview, he mentioned that the majority of the Nigerian engineers who built his refinery were later employed abroad (somewhere in the UAE) to build another refinery.
Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸@jacksonhinklle

🇨🇳🇳🇬 Nigeria, thanks to China, has started selling gasoline instead of just oil. China helped build the $20 billion Dangote Oil Refinery. As a result, approximately 44,000 barrels of gasoline were exported per day in March.

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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@EngineerAdam123 Dangote cement factories use natural gas and coal. You guys have no clue whatsoever. Natural gas and coal can be expensive in Nigeria, but that doesn't make his factory to be diesel dependent. I don't know how you can produce cement at scale with diesel
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Adam Muhammad Mukhtar
Adam Muhammad Mukhtar@EngineerAdam123·
Yesterday, Channels TV interviewed Dangote and asked why his cement and other locally produced goods are expensive. Here’s what he said: “All the companies you know under me spend at least ₦95 billion every single month on diesel alone. The cement plant in Obajana alone consumes about 50 million litres of diesel every month. At the end of the year, our total diesel cost is over ₦1 trillion annually. That’s not a small amount that people can ignore. So the cost of our products, especially cement, has to be high because from production to distribution, we rely heavily on diesel.” That was Dangote’s explanation. Now think about it. A man spending over ₦1 trillion yearly just on diesel, not even counting maintenance, staff salaries, allowances, taxes, and other expenses. Do you even understand what ₦1 trillion means? 😒 For comparison, Jigawa State with a population of over 8.2 million has never had a ₦1 trillion budget till today. With all this wealth, Dangote still has just his three daughters. May God protect us from poverty in this world and the hereafter. 👌
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@Arcfunmi The question is how you access the park to the southwest? AI is good for conceptual currently, however you still need engineers to make this work
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Son of David
Son of David@DrOlusesan·
Go after industrial level proficiency and dont waste your time doing cottage work like gates and burglar proof. Go for industrial welding and fabrication - fuel tanker, tanks and water tank towers. Stay away from machinery (milling), piping construction. The gold mine of welding & fab is steel trusses iron roof. If you succeed at just one project, you won't have time to sleep at home again. The demand his high, people who have the experience to construct are few.
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@Beno10_MFC X1 +X2 +X3 = 180 X1 = X2 = 180-150 = 30 X3 = 180-30-30 X3 = 120
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👑Beno10
👑Beno10@Beno10_MFC·
Test your IQ level Can you find the missing angel?
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Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@debayor01123 @ashita_valdez I openly declared it, go and do your worse, low IQ animal Let me say it in a simple language that you may understand. Secularism is the path to progress and development. Ataturk experiment shows that Muslim majority countries can be progressive and liberal.
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Adebayo .D
Adebayo .D@debayor01123·
Oponu afofungbemu Idiots like you should drop the pretence!!! Yes the concerns of the Hausa communities in the north needs to be addressed... But mentioning Ataturk as a model should be your ticket out of Islam..... Just openly declare your kufr.... Imagine seeing a man who removed the Shari'a from türkîye.... Banned the hijab Banned the adhan in Arabic Prohibited fasting during Ramadan Imagine portraying him as a model.... Secularism!!! Secularism!!! How it helping Tunisia, Albania, Bosnia and even türkîye themselves..... How do you say muslims moving away from the laws of the creator = development? How is that helping western societies?
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Oboreyuku Ōu🔻
Oboreyuku Ōu🔻@ashita_valdez·
Dan Fodio is one of the reasons why some of you in the North still look like you have retained Islam in your households to this day. People like you, BTW, are part of the reason kuffar like Ataturk rose in Turkey, and why a former powerhouse of the Muslim world eventually lost ground to secularism. But of course, simpletons will never understand.
Mr 1-5@MIKassim

Usmanu starved cities in order to bring Islam to people that were already Muslims 😂 Fulani jihad

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Daniel 🇳🇬🇬🇧🇵🇸
Daniel 🇳🇬🇬🇧🇵🇸@dangelinhooo·
@debayor01123 @jwastecx @ashita_valdez Turkey is such a model country that Turkey joining the EU was a major reason why brexit was a thing. I love Turkey and my Turkish brothers and sisters (even the secular ones) but it’s no Liechtenstein. The country still has issues but the guy is acting like Turkey is paradise
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@ashita_valdez @Abubaka41965675 Brainless idiots, you currently live in one of the poorest and the most terrorise pieces of land anywhere in the world, and the only thing you worry about is religion. Funking retarded idiot!
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Oboreyuku Ōu🔻
Oboreyuku Ōu🔻@ashita_valdez·
@Abubaka41965675 It's a pathetic shit show. Kuffar are planning + plotting and these clowns are busy breaking ranks with brothers that quite frankly, can't do shit, and are also in the same shit hole as they are.
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@ashita_valdez ...showing that Islam can coexist with modernity and secularism. With you lots, it seems like you people don't have a working brain, zombie that will burn down everything just to come out to shout Islam.
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Abdulwasiu
Abdulwasiu@jwastecx·
@ashita_valdez It's funny how brainless you people are. You don't care if bandits kill, rape, and make your community unhabitable. As long as you can still come out to talk about Islam, you are okay. Turkey is a model secular Muslim majority country, thanks to Atatuks, a model country...
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Patrick Anum
Patrick Anum@patrickanum·
Gimba Kakanda rewrites history, and his piece is filled with half-truths. Leaning heavily on simply Nupe examples, i.e., the Etsu Nupe and Lapai to argue that identity is fluid and selectable is historically inaccurate. What happened in places like Nupe, Ilorin, and parts of Hausaland after the Fulani Jihad was not a gentle blending of identities. It was political conquest followed by elite assimilation. Fulani ruling families became entrenched as emirs, and over generations, some adopted local languages and identities for legitimacy. That is not the same thing as saying identity is freely chosen. In many parts of the Middle Belt, similar processes did not produce the same outcome. And that difference matters. Groups like the Bwatiye, Tiv, Berom, Jukun, Atyap, Eggon, Idoma, etc., resisted incorporation into emirate systems precisely because they understood that what was being offered was not “fluid identity,” but absorption into a political order. So using Nupe elites as a universal template is insulting to those of us who are well versed in history. This piece frames “Hausa-Fulani” as a kind of optional, even hypocritical, identity fusion. But historically, it has not just been cultural; it has always been political. So the term “Hausa-Fulani” is less about pretending two groups are one, and more about describing a historically fused political bloc post jihad that has had enduring administrative and electoral consequences. Gimba treats it like a casual identity label, ignoring the political aspects and who benefits from that fusion. The weakest part of the argument is drawing on a false equivalence between Nupe-Fulani and Hausa-Fulani, because they do not scale the same way. Even when Nupe came under Fulani influence, the integration remained territorial, not civilizational. Also, the Nupe population is smaller than the Hausa population, and there was no absorption at the same scale. So to say what applies to Nupe elites should apply everywhere ignores scale, history, and political consequence. But I made an observation: Gimba romanticizes “fluid identity” and ignores the conflict it has the potential to create. We must recognize that identity has never been this flexible abstraction Gimba describes. Identity determines who is an “indigene,” who owns land, and who can access political office. The claim that “identity is fluid” sounds appealing, but in practice, identity in Nigeria is hardened by competition over land, power, and security, so the post ignores why people resist such labels Many communities resisted such labels or absorbed into emirate structures because they understood the long-term implication: loss of language, loss of traditional governance, and subordination within a larger political hierarchy. So what the Gimba calls “integration,” others have historically experienced as erasure. Romanticizing multi-descent is morally attractive but politically naïve because it is disconnected from Nigerian state reality. Yes, multi-identity makes sense sociologically. But politically, identity & indigeneship in Nigeria is tied to land and ancestry, not upbringing. Also, access to state benefits, representation, and rights is zero-sum in many contexts. If you allow full multi-ethnic claims without restructuring the system, you don’t get harmony, what you will get are more claims to the same resources, with disputes over “who belongs.” Gimba doesn’t address the underlying structural issue, which is that we live in a country with ethnicised federalism where there is competition over limited resources. Also, there is an unspoken assumption in the piece that all groups can afford to be flexible, which is not true. The reality is that only major groups can experiment with identity because they are not under threat of disappearance while smaller groups cannot. So when the piece criticizes “rigidity,” it misses that rigidity is often a response to historical erasure, not ignorance.
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